Main menu

Recipients of 2017 Human Health and the Environment seed grants announced

July 6, 2017

The Human Health and the Environment seed grantsfor 2017 have been awarded to a pool of interdisciplinary researchers at Penn State. These seed grants were funded by eight separate Penn State research entities and institutes which collectively contributed over $500,000.

The principal investigators — along with their affiliated colleges and project titles — who were awarded Human Health and the Environment seed grants for 2017 are:

Randy Lee Vander Wal — College of Earth and Mineral Sciences, "Identification of Toxicity Parameters Associated with Combustion Produced PM2.5 Surface Chemistry and Particle Structure by in Vitro Assays"

These researchers will be conducting interdisciplinary research on a wide range of topics, including environmentally linked changes in health, the reduction of health risks using technology, and the improvement of knowledge and safe practices in agriculture.

“Seed grant programs like this unleash the creativity and imagination of our faculty, inspire new interdisciplinary collaborations and generate preliminary data for novel research directions,” said Tom Richard, director of the Institutes of Energy and the Environment and a professor of agricultural and biological engineering. “I am particularly inspired by work that can help children and disadvantaged communities, including communities in Pennsylvania where children suffer asthma and other respiratory diseases at several times the normal rates; farmworkers and their families exposed to pesticides; and health of children dislocated from their homes and communities as a result of climate change — a tragic situation that is already occurring in many parts of the world.”

The Penn State College of Medicine, the Penn State Cancer Institute, the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences, the Social Sciences Research Institute, the Clinical Translational Science Institute, the Materials Research Institute, the Institute for CyberScience and the Institutes of Energy and the Environment all solicited research proposals — further underscoring the interdisciplinary nature of these grants.

“We had an exceptional pool of proposals from faculty across the university,” Richard said. “The projects address emerging contaminants well as legacy environmental problems that seriously impact human health.”

Jim Marden, associate director of the Huck Institutes of the Life Sciences and professor of biology, said the application pool was “mind-bogglingly diverse.” Marden noted that seed grants of this sort help elevate the importance of research at Penn State, encouraging faculty members to think of creative and high-risk, high-reward research topics.

Applications for seed grants for research in Future Energy Supply, Smart Energy Systems, Climate and Ecosystem Change and Water and Biogeochemical Cycles will become available during the fall semester.

Population Research Institute

601 Oswald Tower

University Park, PA 16802

Phone: (814) 865-7760

The Social Science Research Institute is committed to making its websites accessible to all users, and welcomes comments or suggestions on access improvements. Please send comments or suggestions on accessibility to web@ssri.psu.edu.